Angry at the school’s release recommendation that tells 14-year-old boy how to “safely suffocate his girlfriend during sex”

Council-funded sex education PowerPoint shows teens who have previously mentioned their partners to ask for consent.
Funded by the Briddende County Borough Council in South Wales, the material proved to be a student studying PSHE courses in a range of secondary schools.
Provided by the Council’s Domestic Abuse Services, Assia, PowerPoint, by erateach children to “agree (when suffocation during sexual intercourse) that should happen every time a sexual asphyxiation is performed”.
It continued, “It is never possible without asking them first and giving them space to refuse.”
But experts shared their deep concerns in sex education classes, which they said were the idea of “safely suffocating.”
“It’s not sex education, it’s just advocacy in the porn industry,” Michael Conroy, a worker, told The Times.
“Imagine you are a 14-year-old girl, you tell your boyfriend that you don’t want to be choked, but then there is an authorized person going to school and telling you it’s okay.
Suffocation cuts oxygen off the brain and is harmful and may even kill. Most schools will believe that things that local authorities recognize are OK. There is a rampant myth that choking can be done safely, and it is just another option for sexual behavior.
Council-funded sex education PowerPoint shows cited teens asking for consent before suffocating their partner

In recent years, teenage boys demand rough sex, including suffocation

Nearly two-thirds of women responding to a survey said they were choked by their partners during sex
Teenage boys have demanded mass sex in recent years, and teenage boys, including suffocation, have indeed had a disturbing rise.
According to the New York Times, a recent survey by Dr. Debby Herbenick was one of the most important American sexual behavior researchers in the United States, asking 5,000 women anonymously at the “large Midwest University.”
Almost two-thirds of the women who answered the answer said they were choked by their partners during sex – but a more worrying statistic: 40% of them were between the ages of 12 and 17 and had their first time choking.
In previous surveys, the figure was less than 25% (or one quarter).
Peggy Orenstein, a sex researcher and university professor, recalled that two students (15 and 16) asked her about suffocation during her sex life.
A 15-year-old boy said worryingly: “Why do girls want to be choked?”
In fact, some people blame popular culture on choking during sex.
A pilot who choked in a series of TV shows, including HBO’s euphoria – high school was choked.

Sex researchers and university professor Peggy Orenstein notices the rise in this phenomenon during sex

In last year’s single, Jack Harlow’s Lovin on Me started with the lyrics: “I’m a vanilla baby, I’ll choke you, but I’m not a killer, baby.”
Last year, American rapper Jack Harlow’s hit single, titled “lovin on Me,” began with the lyrics: “I’m a vanilla baby, I’ll suffocate you, but I’m not a killer, baby.”
Briddende County Borough Council strongly denied that they had funded education, “teaching children to agree to sexual abuse.”
A council spokesman said: “It is incorrect to advise children to agree to sexual abuse.
“All pastoral advice used by local schools is well designed to suit the age and encourages teenagers of mature young people to build healthy, respectful relationships without any form of abuse.
“The Bridged County Borough Council takes its safeguard responsibility very seriously and anyone close to Asia’s domestic abuse service on this issue will be informed that non-fatal strangulation remains an illegal, dangerous crime.”
In response to the now-deleted X post on X about sex education classes, the Bridgend County Borough Commission wrote: “Your post on the Assia domestic abuse service of the Bridgend County Borough Council is actually incorrect and has caused widespread misinformation.”